=head1 VERSION
-Version 0.13
+Version 0.15
=cut
our $VERSION;
BEGIN {
- $VERSION = '0.13';
+ $VERSION = '0.15';
}
=head1 SYNOPSIS
use indirect;
my $y = new Pear; # ok
{
- no indirect hook => sub { die "You really wanted $_[0]\->$_[1]" };
- my $z = new Pineapple 'fresh'; # croaks 'You really wanted Pineapple->new'
+ no indirect hook => sub { die "You really wanted $_[0]\->$_[1] at $_[2]:$_[3]" };
+ my $z = new Pineapple 'fresh'; # croaks 'You really wanted Pineapple->new at blurp.pm:13'
}
}
no indirect ':fatal';
=head2 C<I_THREADSAFE>
-True iff the module could have been built when thread-safety features.
+True iff the module could have been built with thread-safety features enabled.
=head1 CAVEATS
+The implementation was tweaked to work around several limitations of vanilla C<perl> pragmas : it's thread safe, and doesn't suffer from a C<perl 5.8.x-5.10.0> bug that causes all pragmas to propagate into C<require>d scopes.
+
C<meth $obj> (no semicolon) at the end of a file won't be seen as an indirect object syntax, although it will as soon as there is another token before the end (as in C<meth $obj;> or C<meth $obj 1>).
With 5.8 perls, the pragma does not propagate into C<eval STRING>.